support Swiss representations in safeguarding Switzerland’s interests and in emergencies involving Swiss citizens abroad. In an emergency the representation responsible (embassy or consulate-general) must be contacted immediately.

All consular services and visa support for people resident in Greece and Cyprus are provided by the regional consular centre Greece/Cyprus in Athens.

A selection of websites explaining how Switzerland is structured and how it functions, providing you with the information you will need to form an opinion and exercise your political rights from overseas

Services

Contact the responsible Swiss representation or consulate when you want to register or unregister as a resident, when you need a new passport, have moved or wish to apply for citizenship. The entire selection of services offered can be found in the dropdown menu to the right. The contact details of the responsible Swiss representation are shown on the corresponding page.

Swiss citizens who get into difficulties abroad, also can ask for advice and help from the Swiss representative.

The magazine for the Swiss Abroad appears six times a year and provides information about what is happening at home and the activities of Swiss associations abroad. It also answers administrative questions.

FDFA services abroad

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Online desk

With the online desk you have the possibility to access consular services, such as registering in the Swiss Abroad Register, notifications of changes of civil status, changes of address.

Bilateral relations Switzerland–Greece

Relations between Switzerland and Greece are close, reflecting a long tradition between the two countries. They extend to the economy, energy, culture, tourism and cooperation in the field of migration.

Key aspects of diplomatic relations

Switzerland and Greece have common interests in the areas of energy, taxation and migration. The two countries also share converging interests in international forums such as the United Nations and the Organization for Security and Co-operation in Europe (OSCE).

Switzerland is providing support to the TAP project for a Trans Adriatic Pipeline, which is expected to start transporting gas from Azerbaijan to Italy via Turkey, Greece and Albania by 2019–20.

As a Schengen member state, Switzerland monitors the external borders of the Schengen Area. It deploys Swiss border guards through Frontex to critical locations on the Schengen Area’s external borders, including Greece.

Economic cooperation

Switzerland has historically had a positive trade balance with Greece. It exported goods worth CHF 777 million to Greece in 2016. Major exports include pharmaceuticals, watches, agricultural products, chemical products and machinery.

At the end of 2015, Switzerland was the sixth largest foreign direct investor in Greece. There are about 60 Swiss companies in Greece, employing some 6,100 people.

In the long term the continuing presence of Swiss firms will depend on the recovery of the Greek economy. An area of potential for Swiss investment are renewable energies.

Greece is very popular with Swiss tourists. Each year some 400,000 Swiss nationals spend their holidays in Greece, making a significant contribution to the Greek economy.

Cooperation in education, research and innovation

Researchers and artists from Greece can apply for Swiss Government Excellence Scholarships to the State Secretariat for Education, Research and Innovation (SERI). Each year the Swiss School of Archaeology in Greece (ESAG) in Eretria on the island of Euboea near Athens offers Swiss students a chance to conduct practical archaeological research over the summer. Since 1975, the school has been a cornerstone of Switzerland’s academic and cultural presence in Greece.

Cultural exchanges

Each year the Swiss embassy organises projects for the 'Semaine de la Francophonie' and the 'Settimana della lingua italiana' with the relevant foreign cultural institutions. Swiss films are screened at Greek film festivals every year.

A major Greek cultural event in Switzerland was the 'Eretria' exhibition in Basel in 2010–11, which showcased artefacts found by Swiss archaeologists since 1972 on the site of the ancient city of Eretria.

Swiss nationals in Greece

According to the Statistics on the Swiss Abroad, 3,101 Swiss nationals were living in Greece at the end of 2016.

History of bilateral relations

Switzerland has had a diplomatic representation in Greece since 1895, when it opened a consulate general in Patras. It subsequently opened a legation in Athens, which was upgraded to an embassy in 1954.

During the German occupation of Greece from 1941–44, the Swiss consulate supported the efforts of the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) to assist the starving population. After the Second World War two Swiss nationals were particularly active in promoting Greek culture: Pavlos Tsermias, a correspondent for the Neue Zürcher Zeitung and professor of Modern Greek, and Bertrand Bouvier, a professor at the University of Geneva, translator and editor of Greek texts.

During the negotiations surrounding the Congress of Vienna in 1815, Ioannis Kapodistrias, a native of Corfu in the service of Tsar Alexander I of Russia, successfully secured the reorganisation of the Swiss Confederation and international recognition of Switzerland's neutrality.

The Greek uprising of 1821 against Ottoman rule led to the establishment of an independent Greek state in 1830. Prominent figures from Switzerland supported the Greek rebels. The memory of two Swiss personalities is still honoured in Greece: the banker Jean-Gabriel Eynard, and Johann-Jakob Meyer, founder of the first Greek daily newspaper.